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UC researchers receive Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers

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Fourteen University of California researchers are recipients of Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers, the highest honor granted by the U.S. government to scientific professionals in the initial phases of their careers.

Government agencies and departments select recipients annually based on the innovative nature of their research and their commitment to public service. This year, 105 scientists and engineers total earned awards.

Pieter Abbeel — Abbeel is an assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences at UC Berkeley. His research concentrates on robotics and machine learning, producing a variety of applications, from a laundry-folding robot to the new app Gradescope. He has also been recognized for his exceptional mentorship of undergraduate researchers in his lab.

Hillel Adesnik — Professor Adesnik addresses fundamental questions of neuroscience as the principal investigator (PI) of the Adesnik Lab at UC Berkeley. An assistant professor of neurobiology, Adesnik’s goal is to reveal the neural basis of perception in humans and animals.

Sayeef Salahuddin — An associate professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences at UC Berkeley, Salahuddin demonstrates the viability of novel electronic and spintronic devices for low power applications.

UC Davis

Tessa Hill — An associate professor in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and at the UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory, Hill is also associate director of the UC Davis Coastal and Marine Sciences Institute. She studies the response of marine life to environmental changes, such as ocean acidification, and leads a National Science Foundation-supported program to promote climate change science in K-12 classrooms.

Mark Bittman speaks with Tessa Hill of UC Davis about the effects of ocean acidification on the marine ecosystem.Credit: Mark Bittman: California Matters

UC Irvine

Alon Gorodetsky — Gorodetsky is an assistant professor of chemical engineering and materials science at the UC Irvine Samueli School of Engineering. He leads the Gorodetsky Group for Biomolecular Electronics, working at the intersection of physics, chemistry, biology and materials science, and recently discovered a protein that may improve communication between medical devices and the human body.

UCLA

Dino Di Carlo — A professor in the department of bioengineering and biomedical engineering at UCLA, Di Carlo studies cancer metastasis and nonlinear microfluidics in his lab.

Dino Di Carlo, Jonathan Hopkins and Benjamin WilliamsCredit: UCLA

Jonathan Hopkins — Hopkins is an assistant professor of mechanical engineering and director of the Flexible Research Group at UCLA. The aim of his research is to understand and create sophisticated flexible structures with extraordinary capabilities, such as elastic energy storage and release.

Benjamin Williams — Williams is an associate professor and area director of physical and wave electronics at UCLA. He operates the Terahertz Devices and Intersubband Nanostructures Laboratory, which studies device physics and pioneers the development of new devices that can generate and control terahertz radiation.

UC San Francisco

Adam Abate — Abate is an assistant professor of bioengineering at the UC San Francisco School of Pharmacy. His research focuses on microfluidics for applications such as genetic sequencing and cell sorting that could help engineer proteins and diagnose cancers.

UC Santa Barbara

Camilla Forsberg.Credit: UC Santa Cruz

Michelle O'Malley — An assistant professor of chemical engineering at UC Santa Barbara, O’Malley engineers protein synthesis and manipulates cellular behavior in her lab for biomedical and environmental applications, with a particular focus on energy efficiency and sustainability.

UC Santa Cruz

Camilla Forsberg — An associate professor of biomolecular engineering at UC Santa Cruz, Forsberg’s research interests encompass stem cells, blood cell development, genomics and more. Her lab, the Forsberg Lab, focuses on stem cell fate decisions of the blood system in order to prevent and treat disorders of the hematopoietic system, including anemia, autoimmune disease, leukemias and lymphomas.

Tammy Ma — An experimental physicist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory's National Ignition Facility, Ma focuses on the Ignition Campaign and X-ray Thomson scattering, among other research interests.

Tammy Ma describes the excitement of performing world-class research at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.Credit: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Los Alamos National Laboratory

David Mascareñas — Mascareñas is a research and development engineer at the Los Alamos National Laboratory's Engineering Institute and also runs the laboratory's Dynamic Summer School. He founded the laboratory's Advanced Studies Institute, a unique educational program that invites doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers to propose new solutions to vital issues relating to global security. He researches the deployment of sensor nodes and wireless sensor networks, and the development of techniques to better connect humans to data via vibro-tactile interfaces.